Um ihren Vater vor dem Tod in der Armee zu retten, tritt ein junges Mädchen heimlich an seine Stelle und wird im weiteren Verlauf eine der größten Heldinnen Chinas.Um ihren Vater vor dem Tod in der Armee zu retten, tritt ein junges Mädchen heimlich an seine Stelle und wird im weiteren Verlauf eine der größten Heldinnen Chinas.Um ihren Vater vor dem Tod in der Armee zu retten, tritt ein junges Mädchen heimlich an seine Stelle und wird im weiteren Verlauf eine der größten Heldinnen Chinas.
- Für 1 Oscar nominiert
- 17 Gewinne & 21 Nominierungen insgesamt
Ming-Na Wen
- Mulan
- (Synchronisation)
Eddie Murphy
- Mushu
- (Synchronisation)
Miguel Ferrer
- Shan-Yu
- (Synchronisation)
Harvey Fierstein
- Yao
- (Synchronisation)
Freda Foh Shen
- Fa Li
- (Synchronisation)
June Foray
- Grandmother Fa
- (Synchronisation)
James Hong
- Chi Fu
- (Synchronisation)
Miriam Margolyes
- The Matchmaker
- (Synchronisation)
Pat Morita
- The Emperor
- (Synchronisation)
Marni Nixon
- Grandmother Fa
- (Gesang)
Soon-Tek Oh
- Fa Zhou
- (Synchronisation)
Donny Osmond
- Shang
- (Gesang)
Lea Salonga
- Mulan
- (Gesang)
James Shigeta
- General Li
- (Synchronisation)
George Takei
- First Ancestor
- (Synchronisation)
Jerry Tondo
- Chien-Po
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Jerry S. Tondo)
Gedde Watanabe
- Ling
- (Synchronisation)
Handlung
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesMulan touches her hair a lot because animators noticed that Ming-Na Wen did.
- PatzerWhen Mulan reads the Final Admonition and reads some of it off her arm, it was written in simplified Chinese. However, simplified Chinese was created in the 1950s. Mulan should have used the traditional Chinese symbols.
- Zitate
Mulan: [to Shang] Would you like to stay for dinner?
Grandmother Fa: [Yelling in the background] Would you like to stay forever?
- Crazy CreditsThank you to the Walt Disney Feature Animation Support Staff and our families. Your patience and dedication bring honor to us all.
- Alternative VersionenIn the European version of the movie, Vanessa Mae's rendition of "Reflection" is played instead of the Christina Aguilera version in the credits.
- SoundtracksHonor to Us All
(uncredited) (1998)
Music by Matthew Wilder
Lyrics by David Zippel
Performed by Beth Fowler, Freda Foh Shen, Marni Nixon, Lea Salonga, and the Female Choir
Ausgewählte Rezension
Mulan is a young girl in ancient China. When the Huns start attacking the country, the Emperor orders one member of every family to join the Chinese Army and defend the country. The one member must be a man, but in Mulan's family, the only male is her injured father. Not wanting to allow her father to die, Mulan dresses like a man, and escapes into the night to join the war. To protect her, the ancient elders of her family ask the great Stone Dragon to watch over her. Unfortunately, the great Stone Dragon is destroyed by the little tiny dragon Mushu (Eddie Murphy). So with Mushu and a small cricket by her side, Mulan heads off to help destroy the Huns.
I think we can all guess what happens. Mulan, although a woman, manages to save the day. The plot line isn't really a surprise when you break it down. And the animation is, by now, expected to be great, and Mulan certainly lives up to the great Disney tradition. It's the story and the feeling you get that makes this movie so wonderful. Disney went through a lot to make sure it's depiction of ancient China was accurate. From the decorations on the walls, to the matchmakers, to the great honor in family, Disney manages to show what the country of China was like, and in many ways, still is today. Following the Disney tradition, there is a strong female character, this time taking lead. There are the over the top bad guys, and of course, the comic relief. Eddie Murphy was just down right hilarious in this movie. I wish they had showed more of him. The songs were sort of a change of pace, with Matthew Wilder and Jerry Goldsmith doing the honors, and not the venerable Alan Menken. The music was good, but the lyrics in some of the songs were weak.
The reason I feel Mulan was better than recent Disney fare like Hercules and The Hunchback of Notre Dame is because it had a much more lively feel to it. Hercules was very dark, animation-wise. Everything was centered on the color blue, so it didn't feel alive. And The Hunchback of Notre Dame was a more adult story, and some of the scenes were very dark and broody. Mulan took a simple plot, put it in ancient China, and made it very colorful and fun to watch. It was light, and "Disney" enough for kids to enjoy, while still being adult enough for the parents to enjoy.
Overall, I'd say Mulan is definitely one to watch. Disney animation has done it again.
I think we can all guess what happens. Mulan, although a woman, manages to save the day. The plot line isn't really a surprise when you break it down. And the animation is, by now, expected to be great, and Mulan certainly lives up to the great Disney tradition. It's the story and the feeling you get that makes this movie so wonderful. Disney went through a lot to make sure it's depiction of ancient China was accurate. From the decorations on the walls, to the matchmakers, to the great honor in family, Disney manages to show what the country of China was like, and in many ways, still is today. Following the Disney tradition, there is a strong female character, this time taking lead. There are the over the top bad guys, and of course, the comic relief. Eddie Murphy was just down right hilarious in this movie. I wish they had showed more of him. The songs were sort of a change of pace, with Matthew Wilder and Jerry Goldsmith doing the honors, and not the venerable Alan Menken. The music was good, but the lyrics in some of the songs were weak.
The reason I feel Mulan was better than recent Disney fare like Hercules and The Hunchback of Notre Dame is because it had a much more lively feel to it. Hercules was very dark, animation-wise. Everything was centered on the color blue, so it didn't feel alive. And The Hunchback of Notre Dame was a more adult story, and some of the scenes were very dark and broody. Mulan took a simple plot, put it in ancient China, and made it very colorful and fun to watch. It was light, and "Disney" enough for kids to enjoy, while still being adult enough for the parents to enjoy.
Overall, I'd say Mulan is definitely one to watch. Disney animation has done it again.
- chrisbrown6453
- 16. Juni 2002
- Permalink
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Mulán
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 90.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 120.620.254 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 22.745.143 $
- 21. Juni 1998
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 304.320.254 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 27 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen